Exposes the GITHUB_ACTIONS environment variable to iOS simulator test runs, and
uses this variable to skip a Unix Datagram socketserver test that is unreliable
in the iOS GitHub Actions environment.
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <1324225+hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently, Fedora 42 uses a custom Linux Kernel 6.16.9 that backported an upstream change
from 6.17-rc7 [1,3] but not its subsequent fix [2]. Until the issue is resolved upstream,
we skip the failing test `test_socket.test_aead_aes_gcm` for kernel versions between 6.16
and 6.17.x.
[1] 1b34cbbf4f
[2] d0ca0df179.
[3] 45bcf60fe4
Don't ignore errors raised by `PyErr_WarnFormat` in `warn_about_fork_with_threads`
Instead, ignore the warnings in all test code that forks. (That's a lot of functions.)
In `test_support`, make `ignore_warnings` a context manager (as well as decorator),
and add a `message` argument to it.
Also add a `ignore_fork_in_thread_deprecation_warnings` helper for the deadlock-in-fork
warning.
- Fix `hashlib_helper.block_algorithm` where the dummy functions were incorrectly defined.
- Rename `hashlib_helper.HashAPI` to `hashlib_helper.HashInfo` and add more helper methods.
- Simplify `hashlib_helper.requires_*()` functions.
- Rewrite some private helpers in `hashlib_helper`.
- Remove `find_{builtin,openssl}_hashdigest_constructor()` as they are no more needed and were
not meant to be public in the first place.
- Fix some tests in `test_hashlib` when FIPS mode is on.
Make grp module methods getgrgid() and getgrnam() thread-safe when the GIL is disabled and getgrgid_r()/getgrnam_r() C APIs are not available.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kumar Aditya <kumaraditya@python.org>
PEP-734 has been accepted (for 3.14).
(FTR, I'm opposed to putting this under the concurrent package, but
doing so is the SC condition under which the module can land in 3.14.)
The `__main__` module imported in the `_pyrepl` module points to the `_pyrepl` module itself when the interpreter was launched without `-m` option and didn't execute a module,
while it's an unexpected behavior that `__main__` can be `_pyrepl` and relative imports such as `from . import *` works based on the `_pyrepl` module.
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
It now supports a "full" fallback to _PyFunction_GetXIData() and then `_PyPickle_GetXIData()`. There's also room for other fallback modes if that later makes sense.
Co-authored-by: Adam Turner <9087854+AA-Turner@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Co-authored-by: Tomas R. <tomas.roun8@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rogdham <contact@rogdham.net>
There's some extra complexity due to making sure we we get things right when handling functions and classes defined in the __main__ module. This is also reflected in the tests, including the addition of extra functions in test.support.import_helper.
Modifies the test helper that counts the list of open file descriptors to use
the optimised ``/dev/fd`` approach on all Apple platforms, not just macOS. This
avoids crashes caused by guarded file descriptors.
This ensures that if we jump through some hoops to make sure something is imported
lazily, we don't regress on importing it.
I recently already accidentally made typing import warnings and annotationlib eagerly.
Co-authored-by: Adam Turner <9087854+AA-Turner@users.noreply.github.com>
Make `warnings.catch_warnings()` use a context variable for holding
the warning filtering state if the `sys.flags.context_aware_warnings`
flag is set to true. This makes using the context manager thread-safe in
multi-threaded programs.
Add the `sys.flags.thread_inherit_context` flag. If true, starting a new
thread with `threading.Thread` will use a copy of the context
from the caller of `Thread.start()`.
Both these flags are set to true by default for the free-threaded build
and false for the default build.
Move the Python implementation of warnings.py into _py_warnings.py.
Make _contextvars a builtin module.
Co-authored-by: Kumar Aditya <kumaraditya@python.org>
A new extension module, `_hmac`, now exposes the HACL* HMAC (formally verified) implementation.
The HACL* implementation is used as a fallback implementation when the OpenSSL implementation of HMAC
is not available or disabled. For now, only named hash algorithms are recognized and SIMD support provided
by HACL* for the BLAKE2 hash functions is not yet used.